Choose a couple of these games (they all are pretty simple) and give them a try. It will help you get a feel for the kinds of games you can build with PowerPoint. Of course, you know how to build a Jeopardy or a Who Wants to Be a Millionaire style game, so branch out and explore something else. (You cannot get credit for a Jeopardy or Who Wants to Be a Millionaire game for the Beginner's Craft because you already did those - or will do them - in the multimedia course, CPED 5301.) You can write up the games you explore here as a Quest topic, using the subject "PPT Games" under the Discussion Tab, Adventurer's Log, for up to 5 XPs.
Proceeding down Dragon Lane, Druscilla, the pretty dragon on the left, suggests you might want to stop by the Old Cabin at the bend of the road. Michael Barbour, Gretchen Thomas, Dawn Ratisher, and Lloyd Rieber are there talking about "Homemade Power Point Games." It is pretty important to finish this craft to take a Pilgrimage to see what they have to say.
Dragon Lane
Choose a couple of these games (they all are pretty simple) and give them a try. It will help you get a feel for the kinds of games you can build with PowerPoint. Of course, you know how to build a Jeopardy or a Who Wants to Be a Millionaire style game, so branch out and explore something else. (You cannot get credit for a Jeopardy or Who Wants to Be a Millionaire game for the Beginner's Craft because you already did those - or will do them - in the multimedia course, CPED 5301.) You can write up the games you explore here as a Quest topic, using the subject "PPT Games" under the Discussion Tab, Adventurer's Log, for up to 5 XPs.
Proceeding down Dragon Lane, Druscilla, the pretty dragon on the left, suggests you might want to stop by the Old Cabin at the bend of the road. Michael Barbour, Gretchen Thomas, Dawn Ratisher, and Lloyd Rieber are there talking about "Homemade Power Point Games." It is pretty important to finish this craft to take a Pilgrimage to see what they have to say.